- Recognize family-centered practice as a key component of managing your infant and toddler classroom.
- Learn how to be respectful and welcoming for infants, toddlers, and their families in your classroom and program.
- Recognize the different backgrounds, perspectives, and experiences of families.
Learn
Know
Welcoming Each Child and Family
Where do you feel welcomed? What happens in a place that makes you feel welcome?
Spend a few seconds thinking about the two questions above. Then consider all the things you do in your daily work to make infants, toddlers, and their families feel welcome in your classroom and program. How do you greet children and families in the morning and when it’s time to go home? How do you ensure that infants and toddlers feel welcome, learn, and develop while having fun? How do you comfort them when they seem upset or miss their loved ones? How do you ensure that families feel welcome and supported?
Successful infant-toddler providers create positive, welcoming environments for the children and families they work with and strive for excellence in their interactions with others. The most important aspects of your work are the relationships you create and nurture with children, families, and colleagues. These relationships form over time and require ongoing effort and commitment. Collaborating with others is a big part of your work, and whether you are a new or seasoned staff member, your success and effectiveness is greatly dependent upon how well you work with others. Whether you are engaging with infants and toddlers, families, colleagues, or supervisors, nurturing all of these relationships early on is critical to your success.
Infant and toddler development happens so quickly. When families and caregivers work together, communicate, and share what is observed and experienced, opportunities are created for better understanding and supporting this rapid time of developmental growth. Asking questions, communicating, and listening with families helps support continuity of care between children’s home and the care setting.
Understanding the children in your care and child development is absolutely essential in your role as an infant-toddler caregiver. You can find extensive information and further details on each of the developmental domains in domain specific courses within the Virtual Lab School (e.g., Cognitive Development, Physical Development, Social & Emotional Development), as well as strategies and practical ideas on how to promote optimal growth. You should refer to these courses for comprehensive information about infant-toddler development. Along with infant-toddler development, knowledge about topics in courses such as Safe Environments, Learning Environments, Healthy Environments, Positive Guidance, Child Abuse, and Family Engagement will strengthen your competence and enable you to positively impact the lives of children and families you engage with. Greater outcomes in children’s development are achieved when children in your care are healthy, emotionally secure, and socially connected. These outcomes, however, cannot be achieved unless you put infants’ and toddlers’ families at the forefront of your work.
When engaging with families of children with special learning needs, you should work with your T&CS and administrator to ensure that you have the resources and supports you need. You should work collaboratively with T&CSs, administrators, and the child’s family members to be sure that an infant’s or toddler’s Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) outcomes are addressed (if appropriate) in your classroom and program. Successful inclusion of children with disabilities requires careful planning, intentional teaching, and ongoing communication among all team members. Building these kinds of collaborative relationships takes time and commitment, but will have meaningful outcomes on your practice.
You will work with your T&CS and administrator to ensure that families are welcomed and supported at all times in your classroom and program. Just as you care about how infants and toddlers in your care are welcomed, you should also pay attention to how families are included in your daily work, not only at drop-off and pick-up time, but throughout their child’s day. In doing so, consider the following:
- Ask family members how they would like to be involved in your classroom and remind them that they are important to you.
- Respect each child and their family. Acknowledge individual differences in growth, background, values, and beliefs.
- Share information with families about the work you do with their infants and toddlers and, if needed, explain why or how you do specific things in certain ways.
- Families can choose to be involved in various ways. For military families, it is critical to have flexibility in how they are able to participate.
- When families volunteer to be in your classroom, they need to have clear directions, a purpose, and they need to know what the expectations are for them.
- Family members want to have meaningful conversations about their child’s experiences, interests, and successes. Make sure you keep them updated about their child’s growth regularly. Acknowledge all the great things infants and toddlers do on a daily basis and share those with their families often! Ongoing communication and collaboration creates a foundation for acceptance and trust that benefits everyone.
- All families have strengths and all families experience their own different challenges. Focus on each family’s strengths and build on those.
Introducing Family-Centered Practice
Because families are central to their child’s development, particularly when it comes to the early childhood years, they are partners, active participants, and decision-makers in their children’s education process. As a result, family-centered practice is considered one of the indicators of quality in early childhood education, programs, and services. At the heart of family-centered practice is the belief that families are the most important decision-makers in a child’s life (Sandall, Hemmeter, Smith, & McLean, 2005).
Family-centered practice also means that you understand the important effect all family members have on each other and on their infant or toddler. Each family member affects one another, and the ways in which their family functions as a whole. All family members are interconnected. From our families, we learn skills that enable us to engage in school and the workplace, and how we should interact with others to form relationships.
When considering family-centered practice, you are viewing the children in your care as part of a larger system; you are viewing family members as a whole. You become aware of, and sensitive to, the interactions and relationships that take place within the family, as well as how outside interactions and supports affect them. In an effort to maintain relationships and to work effectively together, you learn to respect and understand the characteristics of each family and its support system. You can also consider the characteristics and stressors that may impact a family’s involvement. What may affect one family member can impact all family members. A family is a complex system in which no one member can be viewed in isolation.
Family-centered practice is an umbrella term that encompasses the beliefs and actions of people in your program. Consider this table:
Family-Centered PracticeFamily-centered practice is a set of beliefs and actions that influence how we engage families. | |
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Beliefs | Actions |
Families are the most important decision-makers in a child's life. |
|
Families are unique and their differences enrich our programs. |
|
Families are resilient. |
|
Families are central to development and learning. |
|
Families are our partners. |
|
Making an effort to understand infants, toddlers, and their families can create opportunities for you to better support the children in your care.
Family-Centered Practices
Positive Partnerships with Families
Developing positive partnerships with families is one of the most important things you can do as an infant and toddler caregiver. Families are experts on their children ,and your partnership with them will help you to feel more competent in the classroom and allow you to meet the needs of the children you care for. Establishing positive partnerships with families requires you to be a responsive caregiver that:
- Understands that families have important information to share about their child and do not assume they are the only expert.
- Embraces a strengths-based approach to their interactions with families by recognizing and appreciating what each family brings to the program.
- Recognizes there is not one way to partner with families and individualize the ways they engage with them.
- Demonstrates a sensitivity to the fact that each child and family brings unique backgrounds, traditions and experiences to the program and works to incorporate these varied experiences into the program.
- Engages in professional and ethical ways with families including keeping information about children and families confidential and using information to help families, not pass judgement on them.
Family partnerships begin from the moment a family enrolls in the program. When you take the time to establish and maintain these partnerships through everyday interactions, it will make more challenging situations that arise more successful. You will feel more confident discussing concerns about a child’s behavior or development when you have already built a foundation of trust, collaboration, and mutual respect with families.
Partnerships between families and caregivers are especially important when supporting children with disabilities. These partnerships can enhance the effectiveness of a child’s individualized family service plan (IFSP) and individualized education plan (IEP) and improve children’s outcomes and need for intervention. When partnering with families of children with special needs you should:
- Engage in regular communication about their child’s strengths, needs, and progress
- Ask for families input about their child and supports needed by the family
- Connect them with other families with children with special needs
- Include parents in every step of the decision-making process
- Establish shared goals and expectations for their child
- Identify the family’s and caregivers’ role in the intervention
- Demonstrate an openness to learn from those providing additional services to children
Being a responsive caregiver means that you demonstrate sensitivity and consideration for the multiple backgrounds, experiences, values, and contexts in which children and families live.
Being a responsive caregiver also means that you are always professional and ethical when working with families. In doing that, you should practice the following:
- Keep information about children and their families confidential. This refers to reviewing child and family records, having conversations with other infant-toddler providers in your program or in the community, or engaging in conversations with other people you know in the community.
- When you know confidential information about a child or family, use that information to help them and do not pass judgement on them.
- If individuals ask you for confidential information about infants, toddlers, or families in your classroom or program, refer them to your T&CS or administrator.
See
Working With Families of Children With Special Needs
Do
There is a lot you can do to show that you value the families of infants and toddlers in your program. Consider the following guidelines that reflect family-centered practice, and then think about how you can use these guidelines in your work with children and families.
- Recognize the family as the constant in the child's life and that caregivers and service systems may come and go.
- Acknowledge that families know their children best, and learn to view them as partners and collaborators in your work. Reach out to them and invite their input.
- Facilitate collaboration between families and professionals.
- Encourage family-to-family support and networking.
- Recognize and value the unique differences that each family brings to your program. You may do this by:
- Demonstrating genuine interest in each child and family you work with and making an effort to get to know them.
- Having family information and children's books in the home languages of each family.
- Inviting families to visit your classroom and program to sing songs, tell stories, read books, or share about their family background and traditions.
- Observing how a family interacts with their infant or toddler.
- Asking families to create a family or neighborhood storybook.
- Meeting regularly with families to learn about their hopes, dreams and goals for their infant or toddler.
Explore
Read and review the handout Working With Families below. Read the scenario and brainstorm how you would respond. Then, share and discuss your responses with your trainer, coach, or administrator. When you are finished, compare your answers to the suggested response.
Apply
Use the resources in the Partnering with Families activity to learn more about supporting families of children with special needs. After reviewing the articles and resources, discuss and share with your trainer, coach, or administrator ways to implement some of these ideas when working with families that have children with disabilities.
Glossary
Demonstrate
Baker, A. C., & Manfredi/Petitt L. A. (2004). Relationships, the heart of quality care: Creating community among adults in early care settings. National Association for the Education of Young Children.
CONNECT Modules. (n.d.) http://community.fpg.unc.edu/connect-modules/
Division for Early Childhood. (2014). DEC Recommended practices in early Intervention/early childhood special education 2014. https://www.dec-sped.org/dec-recommended-practices
Ernst, J. D. (2015). Supporting family engagement. Teaching Young Children, 9(2), 8-9.
Gonzalez-Mena, J. (2008). Diversity in early care and education: Honoring differences (5th ed). McGraw-Hill.
Hanson, M. J., & Lynch, E. W. (2013). Understanding families: Approaches to diversity, disability, and risk (2nd ed.). Paul H. Brookes.
Head Start Center for Inclusion. (n.d.) http://headstartinclusion.org/
National Association for the Education of Young Children (2011). NAEYC position statement: Code of ethical conduct and statement of commitment. http://www.naeyc.org/positionstatements/ethical_conduct
Rogoff, B. (2003). The cultural nature of human development. Oxford University Press.
Salloum, S. J., Goddard, R. D., & Berebitsky, D. (2018). Resources, learning, and policy: The relative effects of social and financial capital on student learning in schools. Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk (JESPAR), 23(4), 281–303. https://doi.org/10.1080/10824669.2018.1496023
Schweikert, G. (2012). Winning ways: Partnering with families. Redleaf Press. Tomlinson, H. B. (2015). Explaining Developmentally Appropriate Practice to Families. Teaching Young Children, 9(2), 16-17.
Turnbull, A. P., Turbiville, V., & Turnbull, H. R. (2000). Evolution of family–professional partnerships: Collective empowerment as the model for the early twenty-first century. In J. P. Shonkoff & S. J. Meisels (Eds.), Handbook of early childhood intervention (pp. 630–650). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511529320.029
Turnbull, A., Turnbull, R., Erwin, E. J., & Soodak, L. C. (2014). Families, professionals, and exceptionality: Positive outcomes through partnerships and trust (7th ed.). Pearson Education Inc.